Invention: Recycling: Teacher s Guide Grade Level: 6-8 Curriculum Focus: Earth Science Lesson Duration: Two class periods Program Description Thirteen-year-old Casey Golden invented a biodegradable golf tee made from applesauce, sawdust, and other good "junk." A fleece jacket made out of recycled plastic bottles? You bet! Ever since recycling became a hit, people have been creating new ways to reuse materials. Learn more about this relatively young, but crucial, movement to save our environment. Onscreen Questions and Activities Pre-viewing questions: o Think about your most recent visit to the grocery store. What environmentally friendly products did you see? What items could potentially damage our environment? o As you watch the program, note the efforts made to reuse recyclable packaging. Watch for some new approaches to environmental protection and cleanup. Post-viewing questions: o Recycling post-consumer waste is an issue that has developed within the last few decades. Why has recycling become such an important issue? o Talk about the recycling program in your school or community. In what ways has it been successful? o How would you encourage others to recycle? Activity: Invent a product that consists of only biodegradable materials you d find in or around your home. Create an advertisement convincing people to purchase your product, even if at a higher price than similar products. Lesson Plan Student Objectives Students will understand: Biodegradable materials are those that are capable of disintegrating easily in nature.
Invention: Recycling: Teacher s Guide 2 Discarded items made of biodegradable materials take up less room in a landfill and are therefore preferable to items made of materials that take many years to break down. Inventions that use only biodegradable materials are more friendly to the environment than others. Materials Invention: Recycling video and VCR, or DVD and DVD player Computer with Internet access Research materials about biodegradable materials Materials to make models of their biodegradable inventions (students who choose this option should determine what materials are needed) Procedures 1. Review with your students what they know about biodegradable materials. Be sure they understand that biodegradable materials are those that disintegrate easily in nature. 2. Ask students why biodegradable materials are more environmentally friendly, and therefore preferable to those that are not biodegradable. 3. Tell your students that in the early 1990s, a young student invented a golf tee made entirely out of biodegradable substances. Discuss with the class why this invention was important. (Millions of golf tees are used each year, and many people leave them on the golf course after they have used them. Standard golf tees take a long time to disintegrate.) Tell students that they will be asked to come up with their own biodegradable inventions. 4. Divide the class into pairs or small groups, asking each group to dream up a product that consists only of biodegradable materials they can find in their homes or outside. Have them begin by brainstorming ideas for products and writing down their ideas. 5. Students should then write a list of materials they would need for each product and then determine which idea seems most practical. They should research their materials to make sure they are, in fact, biodegradable. 6. Once groups have chosen their inventions, they should either make models of their products or draw detailed diagrams, showing how and where each material would be used. 7. Have groups create marketing campaigns to convince other people to purchase their environmentally friendly products. Discussion Questions 1. Do you think that one day most of our clothing or other everyday items, such as notebooks or paper cups, will be made from recycled materials? What changes would have to be made to society in order for this to occur?
Invention: Recycling: Teacher s Guide 3 2. Are you more likely to buy a product if you know it is made from recycled materials? What if that product isn t quite what you re looking for not as close, say, as a similar nonrecycled product? What if it was more expensive? 3. Discuss whether you think some countries are more interested in recycling and the environment than others. Explain your answers. 4. Explain the reasons why someone might not choose to recycle in their home. Discuss the things you could say to this person to convince him or her to recycle. 5. Think about the packaging that you see in grocery stores today. Discuss and debate whether most products are packaged in an environmentally friendly way. 6. Hypothesize the reasons why some communities have set up elaborate recycling programs while others have no recycling programs at all. Assessment Use the following three-point rubric to evaluate students' work during this lesson. 3 points: Students products use only biodegradable materials; models or diagrams clear and carefully executed; marketing campaigns persuasive and creatively conceived. 2 points: Students products use only biodegradable materials; models or diagrams adequate; marketing campaigns moderately persuasive. 1 point: Students products use only biodegradable materials; models or diagrams unclear or inadequately executed; marketing campaigns weak. Vocabulary biodegradable Definition: Capable of being broken down especially into innocuous products by the action of living things. Context: Biodegradable materials will disintegrate easily in nature. Things that aren t biodegradable will take a very long time to disintegrate and are therefore more wasteful. environmentalism Definition: Advocacy of the preservation or improvement of the natural environment; the movement to control pollution. Context: In the name of environmentalism, it is important to reduce the amount of garbage with which we burden the environment. landfill Definition: A system of trash and garbage disposal in which the waste is buried between layers of earth to build up low-lying land. Context: When garbage leaves a house, its most common destination is a landfill, where it will join other garbage in a giant pile.
Invention: Recycling: Teacher s Guide 4 polyester Definition: Any of a group of polymers that consist basically of repeated units of an ester and are used especially in making fibers or plastics. Context: A polyester fleece can be made from recycled plastic. recycle Definition: To process in order to regain material for human use. Context: Scientists have learned how to recycle plastic materials into fleece jackets. Academic Standards Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL) McREL's Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education addresses 14 content areas. To view the standards and benchmarks, visit http://www.mcrel.org/compendium/browse.asp. This lesson plan addresses the following national standards: Technology: Understands the relationships among science, technology, society, and the individual. Geography Environment and Society: Understands how human actions modify the physical environment. Geography Environment and Society: Understands the changes that occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and importance of resources. Geography Uses of Geography: Understands global development and environmental issues. National Academy of Sciences The National Academy of Sciences provides guidelines for teaching science in grades K-12 to promote scientific literacy. To view the standards, visit this Web site: http://books.nap.edu/html/nses/html/overview.html#content. This lesson plan addresses the following national standards: Science and Technology: Abilities of technological design The National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) The National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) has developed national standards to provide guidelines for teaching social studies. To view the standards online, go to http://www.socialstudies.org/standards/strands/. This lesson plan addresses the following thematic standards: Science, Technology, and Society
Invention: Recycling: Teacher s Guide 5 Support Materials Develop custom worksheets, educational puzzles, online quizzes, and more with the free teaching tools offered on the Discoveryschool.com Web site. Create and print support materials, or save them to a Custom Classroom account for future use. To learn more, visit http://school.discovery.com/teachingtools/teachingtools.html